My brother had a 1995 Carver 355 with Crusader 454s and BW Velvet Drive 5000 transmissions. He had his boat disassembled and trucked to South Carolina then reassembled at the new boat yard. When they 1st moved the boat under power, forward was reverse and reverse was forward. The mechanic assumed the shifter cables were reversed so he reversed them and all was good. In case you're not familiar with Crusaders and transmissions of that era, both engines are standard rotation and counter rotation is done by reversing the linkage on one transmission. So, one transmission is always running in reverse when running forward. He rand the boat for several hours with no problems. Fast forward 2 years and he sells the boat. The prospective owner performed a seatrial and all was good with the engines and performance. He did not have a survey done and declined to have the boat pulled to complete a survey. He ran the boat to Florida and shortly there after, blew both transmissions. Turns out the props were put on wrong, left was right and vice versa. Now he sues my brother for the cost of the transmissions. He claims my brother should have known the props were wrong. The boat was never pulled out of the water after the initial launch and a diver cleaned the hull and props routinely. I have two problems with this: first, he declined to have a survey done where that error would have been found and corrected. Second, if one transmission is always running in reverse, why would it matter to the engines and transmissions which prop was where. What do you guys think? I'd say bring on your law suit and pay my costs when you lose.